A member of the neo-Confederate League of the South (LOS) has pleaded not guilty to taking part in the beating of a black man after the “Unite the Right” rally turned violent in August 2017.
A member of the neo-Confederate League of the South (LOS) has pleaded not guilty to taking part in the beating of a black man after the “Unite the Right” rally turned violent in August 2017.
The president of the neo-Confederate League of the South announced last month that the League was quitting its campaign of public rallies and abandoning its failed alliance with the neo-Nazis of the Nationalist Front (NF). Less than a month later, however, the aging Hill abandoned the new policy and announced the League’s upcoming rally on Sept. 29, 2018, in Elizabethton, Tennessee, a rally that has now been canceled.
A monument to Confederate soldiers that stood in a San Antonio, Texas, park for more than 100 years is now history.
In what has become a game of racist whack-a-mole, Twitter has barred the head of the neo-Confederate League of the South, Michael Hill. Hill quickly reupped on the platform with a new account.
Alamance County Taking Back Alamance County North Carolina (ACTBAC NC), a neo-Confederate hate group, will host an 8 p.m. “Twilight Service” Thursday night at McCorkle Place, the site of University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s monument to Confederate dead.
“We have got a flash rally coming up,” Michael Hill, president of the racist neo-Confederate hate group League of the South, announced last week on the white nationalist podcast Stormfront Action.
This afternoon Brad Griffin, PR Chief of the neo-Confederate League of the South (LOS), announced that the LOS has “withdrawn from the Nationalist Front.”
The Unite the Right rally in August 2017 looked to be a coming-out party of sorts for the racist "alt-right" as well as a turning point for the white supremacist and white nationalist movement in the country.
ǰJason Eric Kessler, the fall came swiftly and proved to be severe.
A new report suggests renaming the city of Austin, Texas, to strip away references to the Confederacy — a recommendation that’s almost certain to trigger a firestorm of controversy.
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